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With less than a week before the Department of Justice must release a tranche of case files related to Jeffrey Epstein, Democrats have continued to seize on the politically expedient topic, which has roiled the Trump administration and caused fractures in the Republican Party.

On Friday, House Democrats released 19 photos from Epstein’s estate that included several images featuring President Donald Trump and other public figures. The White House blasted the move and reiterated its position that the Epstein matter is a ‘Democrat hoax.’

Friday’s disclosure came as Democrats have claimed all year that Epstein’s case has newfound salience because Trump, once among Epstein’s many wealthy friends before Epstein was accused of trafficking underage girls, tried to suppress the files when he took office. Republicans counter that Democrats had full access to the documents for four years under the Biden administration and neither released them nor uncovered information damaging to Trump.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, told Fox News Digital claims of Democratic inconsistency ‘are seriously detached from reality’ and pointed to his own investigations dating back to 2019 into former Trump Labor Secretary Alex Acosta’s handling of a 2008 plea deal with Epstein.

Raskin argued the Democratic Party has not shifted, but rather that the Trump administration has.

‘Trump abruptly killed the ongoing federal investigation into Epstein’s co-conspirators when he took office,’ Raskin said, alleging the administration undertook a ‘massive redaction project’ to hide evidence of Trump’s ties to Epstein. The forthcoming file release is expected to contain significant redactions and include reasons for each one.

‘Democrats have always fought to support an investigation of Epstein’s co-conspirators,’ Raskin said. ‘We have always been on the side of full transparency and justice for the victims.’

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., repeated that point Friday after the photos were published, saying, ‘All we want is full transparency, so that the American people can get the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.’

The heightened Democratic push for transparency comes after years during which the party showed more intermittent interest in Epstein’s case, which some Democrats have attributed to the sensitivity of seeking information while Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking case was pending and while some of Epstein’s victims were pursuing litigation.

But the Democrats’ new, unified fixation on Epstein this year came as Republicans struggled to manage the issue.

The files became a political thorn for the administration after Attorney General Pam Bondi’s chaotic rollout in February of already-public files by the DOJ, which enraged a faction of Trump’s base who had been expecting new information.

The DOJ said at the time that it would not disclose further files because of court orders and victim privacy and said the department found no information that would warrant bringing charges against anyone else. In a turnabout, however, Bondi ordered a review, at Trump’s direction, of Epstein’s alleged connections to Democrats, including former President Bill Clinton.

The president, who was closely associated with Epstein but was never accused of any crimes related to him, also relented to monthslong pressure to sign a transparency bill last month that ordered the DOJ to release all of its hundreds of thousands of Epstein-related records within 30 days. Among the most vocal supporters of the bill was Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., which resulted in her highly public falling out with the president, whom she once fervently supported.

The Epstein saga has also plagued the administration because some of Trump’s allies, now in top roles in the DOJ, once promoted the existence of incriminating, nonpublic Epstein files, including a supposed list of sexual predators who were his clients. FBI Director Kash Patel, for instance, said in 2023 the government was hiding ‘Epstein’s list’ of ‘pedophiles.’ But the DOJ leaders failed to deliver on those claims upon taking office.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., meanwhile, faced accusations from Democrats that he kept the House in recess for about two months to avoid votes on Epstein transparency legislation. Johnson shot back that Democrats had, in his view, been lax on the Epstein case until this year.

‘We’re not going to allow the Democrats to use this for political cover. They had four years,’ Johnson told reporters at the time. ‘Remember, the Biden administration held the Epstein files for four years and not a single one of these Democrats, or anyone in Congress, made any thought about that at all.’

The House Oversight Committee has also spurred infighting over how Epstein material has been handled, as it has been actively engaged in subpoenaing, reviewing, and releasing large batches of Epstein-related records from both the DOJ and Epstein’s estate, including Friday’s photos.

In response to the photos, which were released by committee Democrats, committee Republicans said the Democrats ‘cherry-picked’ them and that they ‘keep trying to create a fake hoax by being dishonest, deceptive, and shamelessly deranged.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament regional rounds had elite play, high-stakes matches and an historic upset.

Texas A&M is going to the Final Four after shocking the volleyball world by eliminating No. 1 overall seed Nebraska in a five-set thriller. The No. 1 overall seeded Cornhuskers had their formally undefeated season and hopes for a sixth program title squashed.

No. 1 seeds Kentucky and Pittsburgh and No. 3 seeded Wisconsin will join the Aggies in Kansas City for the national semifinals, which will be played at the T-Mobile Center on Thursday, Dec. 18.

Which program will win a national championship? As the teams prepare for their toughest tests yet and continue their push for a national title, here are the winners and losers from the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight rounds.

Winners

Texas A&M’s upset of No. 1 Nebraska

The Aggies had an answer for nearly everything the Cornhuskers unleashed. Texas A&M deployed a tempo offense, service pressure and timely blocks to disrupt the usually surefire Cornhuskers. Even after withstanding a two-set Nebraska rally to even up the match, which included 10 Cornhuskers set points and three Aggies match points in the fourth set, Texas A&M hit the gas in the final set to end Nebraska’s perfect season. The Aggies responded to every push from Harper Murray and Rebekah Allick and held standout Andi Jackson in check. Kyndal Stowers had 25 kills to lead three Texas A&M players with double digits in the category. The Aggies had 30 total blocks and nine aces.

No. 1 seeds sweep in the Sweet 16

All four No. 1s made outlasted their opponents during the Sweet 16. Kentucky easily moved past Cal Poly, Pittsburgh grinded out a win over Minnesota, Texas edged out Indiana and Nebraska cruised past Kansas. The Jayhawks had the roughest day among the ousted teams. They had 22 attack errors, six service errors and finished the match with a .029 team hitting percentage.

Pitt’s excellent pancake kill against Minnesota

No. 4 seed Minnesota gave No. 1 Pittsburgh all it could handle, despite the Panthers walking away with a 3-0 victory. Pittsburgh earned every point during an intense back-and-forth matchup that had a stunning 23 ties. Nothing represented the type of match it was more than a sequence in the second set when Minnesota’s Jordan Taylor sent a ball flying over the net. Several Pitt players couldn’t stop it until Brooke Mosher saved the possession with a perfectly timed pancake that sent the ball back over to the Gophers for a crafty kill.

Texas A&M’s libero dig kill vs. Nebraska

Texas A&M’s gritty win against Nebraska was so incredible it doesn’t feel real. Not only did the Aggies eliminate an undefeated team, but they survived a five-set slugfest with the No. 1 overall seed. The match required some serious stamina and even better effort and attention to detail. Look no further than Tatum Thomas’ impeccable slide to get under the volleyball and push it up and over the net for a rare libero dig kill.

Standout performances in the reginal rounds

Several players had standout performances during the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight rounds. Texas outside hitter Torrey Stafford had a tournament performance for the ages in the Sweet 16, including 19 kills on 28 swings and a blistering .679 hitting percentage. Her hitting percentage was the fourth highest in NCAA tournament history for regional, semifinal or national championship match. She also added eight digs and four blocks. During the Elite Eight, Pitt’s Brooke Mosher gets the nod for her all-around day. Mosher had four kills on .500 hitting, three, seven digs and four blocks.

  • Other Sweet 16 top performers
    • Ava Martin, Creighton: 23 kills on .388 hitting
    • Mimi Colyer, Wisconsin: 27 kills on .373 hitting | 10 digs
    • Kiara Reinhardt, Creighton: 15 kills on .737 hitting | 3 blocks
    • Rebekah Allick, Nebraska: Nine kills on 1.000 hitting | 3 blocks
    • Kenna Wollard, Purdue: 23 kills on .457 hitting | 10 digs | 5 blocks
    • Olivia Babcock, Pittsburgh: 19 kills on .366 hitting | 8 digs | 3 blocks
    • Ifenna Cos-Okpalla, Texas A&M: 9 kills on .316 hitting | 5 digs | 12 blocks
  • Other Elite Eight top performers
    • Mimi Colyer, Wisconsin: 22 kills on .296 hitting | 5 digs
    • Logan Lednicky, Texas A&M: 24 kills on .250 hitting | 6 blocks
    • Kenna Wollard, Purdue: 15 kills on .344 hitting | 13 digs | 4 blocks
    • Una Vajagic, Wisconsin: 15 kills on .458 hitting | 8 digs | 2 blocks
    • Kyndal Stowers, Texas A&M: 25 kills on .327 hitting | 16 digs | 2 blocks
    • Olivia Babcock, Pittsburgh: 23 kills on .333 hitting | 4 digs | 2 blocks
    • Brooklyn DeLeye, Kentucky: 18 kills on .326 hitting |12 digs | 3 blocks
    • Harper Murray, Nebraska: 25 kills on .255 hitting | 3 aces | 9 digs | 2 blocks

Losers

Nebraska previously undefeated season ends without a title

Since 1981, there have been four programs to finish a season undefeated and win a national championship: Long Beach State (1998), Nebraska (2000), Southern California (2003) and Penn State (2008, 2009). This year’s Nebraska Cornhuskers will not join that list. The Cornhuskers racked up 33 consecutive victories to open their season, tying the second-most wins by a Nebraska team since 1981, before being eliminated Sunday. Texas A&M handed Nebraska its first home loss since 2022 (63 home matches) to advance to the Final Four.

Cal Poly’s Cinderella run ends during the Sweet 16

After upsetting No. 5 BYU and No. 4 USC in back-to-back five-set thrillers, the Mustangs didn’t have enough against No. 1-seed Kentucky. Cal Poly was swept, 3-0. The Mustangs were unable to get their offense and defense on the same page from one set to the next. Standouts Kendall Beshear and Emma Frederick, who had been fantastic all tournament, weren’t enough to overpower Kentucky. (Cal Poly had few solutions for the Wildcats’ depth or Lizzie Carr and Eva Hudson, who had 20 combined kills and nine total blocks.) By the time the third set ended, the Mustangs had finished with a .114 team hitting percentage and 19 errors.

No. 2 seeds eliminated by No. 3 seeds during the Sweet 16

For the first time since 2009, not a single two-seed team advanced to the Elite Eight. They were all eliminated by the three-seeds during the Sweet 16. Arizona State lost to No. 3 Creighton, SMU lost to No. 3 Purdue and Stanford lost to No. 3 Wisconsin ― all by the score of 3-1. Louisville tried to hold off No. 3 Texas A&M, but was defeated, 3-2, in an absolutely wild reverse sweep. The Aggies fought back and grinded through, including unleashing a stunning nine blocks during the fourth set to secure their place in the Elite Eight.

The pain of losing in the Elite Eight

In the Elite Eight, Kentucky fended off a Creighton team that ran out of steam. For the second straight season, the Bluejays were bounced one round shy of the Final Four. A late tournament loss is a painful reality, and Bluejays freshman Abbey Hayes was overcome with emotion post-match. Hayes, who was comforted by a hug from sophomore Saige Damrow, could not hold back the tears as the team walked to the locker room. Later, senior Ava Martin tried to encapsulate why the loss hurt so much.

‘Our big thing is playing with joy, and I really hope other people can see that because we just have so much fun playing out there together,’ Martin said. ‘That’s just what makes it so hard. We just love each other so much, and we love the sport of volleyball. We’re just happy to be out there doing it.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

FOXBOROUGH, MA – The New England Patriots made the big plays and ran the ball as well as the team ever has. Rookie running back TreVeyon Henderson had two touchdowns of more than 50 yards. Quarterback Drake Maye had two rushing scores for the first time in his young career. And the Pats set a new team record by averaging 9.8 yards per attempt (246 rushing yards total). 

In the grand scheme of the 2025 season and playoffs, none of it mattered much. 

The Patriots fell to the Buffalo Bills, 35-31, on Dec. 14. The loss snapped their 10-game win streak. It also meant the “hat and t-shirt” plans to celebrate their first AFC East title since 2019 had to be delayed until at least next week, when a “Sunday Night Football” matchup against the Baltimore Ravens looms. 

“I think it’s tough to look back at all the other things, but this definitely can be a kind of kick in the butt,” tight end Hunter Henry said. “We’ve had things go our way and everything go our way the last 10 weeks, so this is definitely a reality check. That’s a good football team. We went toe to toe with them in every aspect, but we have to give them credit. We’ve got to get a lot better from this fast.”

Patriots’ defense overpowered by Josh Allen’s second-half performance

The issue for New England was, primarily, the inability to stop the Bills after the first quarter. Mike Vrabel’s team forced three punts to start the game. They then proceeded to watch the Bills, led by reigning MVP Josh Allen (three passing touchdowns) at quarterback, score five consecutive touchdowns. A 21-0 first-half lead, accomplished after a 52-yard sprint by Henderson, and 24-7 advantage evaporated. 

“We were going to need 60 minutes to beat this team,” Vrabel said. 

Instead, the offense supplied a sublime and efficient first 30. Maye waltzed into the end zone twice in the first quarter. 

There are throws Maye wants back but the lesson from this loss is more obvious, he said. 

“At the end of the day, gotta keep the foot on the pedal and keep it going and kind of don’t let them dictate. It starts with me,” he said. “And we kind of felt during the week that we had a chance this was going to happen, and just gotta keep our foot on the pedal. It happened in the first game, they came back, came back.” 

Maye was referencing the Patriots’ Week 5 victory when they took a 20-10 lead early in the fourth quarter only to have Buffalo tie it 10 minutes later. The difference between the two outcomes is that Maye and the offense sustained a drive at the end of the game to give Andy Borregales a chance to kick the game-winning field goal. 

This time, however, Maye couldn’t make the clutch play. After Henderson’s touchdown run, the Pats went three-and-out and turned the ball over on downs on their final possession. Maye lacked the confidence he often exudes that makes him look like a 10-year vet, let alone somebody with just 26 career starts. 

“We just have to be better when we’re up,” Maye said. “It starts with me making some throws. And from there, like coach says, no naps, (we’re) not relaxing. I didn’t feel like we relaxed, just didn’t make enough plays. Credit to them. And I think it’s one of the things that we’re emphasizing during the week. And gotta do a better job.” 

Interference calls loom large late in Bills comeback

The story of the game wouldn’t be complete without some involvement from the referees. After Henderson retook the lead for the Pats, the Bills faced a third-and-4 from near midfield. Allen looked to deliver the ball to Keon Coleman, who was battling cornerback Carlton Davis. Davis broke the play up but one of the back judges ruled that the corner had tugged on Coleman’s jersey from behind. 

Vrabel wouldn’t assign blame to anybody other than his own team. 

“The same guy thought it was a penalty the same way,” Vrabel said. “So, it’s a judgment call. Whether I disagree with it or not doesn’t matter. He called it. That’s how this thing goes.” 

Two plays later, Cook sliced his way into the end zone for the final go-ahead score. All of that came after another questionable pass interference call on cornerback Marcus Jones, despite Khalil Shakir coming down with the 37-yard completion anyway as the Bills trailed 24-21. 

“We just played a playoff game, the first one, and it’s cool because it wasn’t a real playoff game, but the stakes were a playoff kind of thing,” Davis said. “Like I said, it’s good for us to learn this and make some corrections going into this backstretch.” 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • NFL Week 15 featured some painful outcomes for teams that lost superstars to injuries, with Patrick Mahomes and Micah Parsons among those who were hurt.
  • The Chiefs, Bengals and Vikings joined the growing list of teams that have been eliminated from playoff contention.
  • The Rams and Broncos became the first two teams to seal postseason berths, with each atop its conference playoff picture.

The 32 things we learned from Week 15 of the 2025 NFL season:

0. The number of points scored Sunday by the Cincinnati Bengals – in a game they had to win in order to remain on the postseason fringes. Remarkably, the Stripes took the bagel against the Baltimore Ravens despite running 71 plays and holding the ball for nearly 40 minutes. A virtually impossible set of circumstances. It was the first time the Bengals have been shut out since 2017. So much for tying up so much money in QB Joe Burrow and WRs Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, though the latter was unable to play after returning to the concussion protocol for the second time in three weeks.

1. The number of times the Kansas City Chiefs have missed the playoffs in the last decade – that regrettable outcome clinched with Sunday’s loss to the Los Angeles Chargers. The last time K.C. fell short was 2014, coach Andy Reid’s second season with the club.

2. The number of teams that clinched playoff berths Sunday – the first secured this season – the Los Angeles Rams and Denver Broncos both punching their tickets to the Super Bowl 60 tournament. Neither team has yet to win its division but both are in position to win their respective conference’s No. 1 seed.

2a. The New England Patriots botched their opportunity to clinch the AFC East in a come-from-ahead loss to the Buffalo Bills at Gillette Stadium.

3. The number of teams officially eliminated Sunday, the Minnesota Vikings falling by the wayside – well before they took the field Sunday night – along with the Chiefs and Bengals.

4. But Sunday was a very painful one beyond the league’s shifting playoff ramifications – several superstars suffering injuries likely to run the gamut as it pertains to long-term consequences.

5. Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes suffered a torn ACL near the end of Kansas City’s loss, an injury that would have ensured he wouldn’t play in the AFC championship game for the first time since he became the team’s starter in 2018 … though K.C.’s loss had also certified that outcome. One of the more remarkable runs in league history comes to an end on that front.

6.Green Bay Packers DE Micah Parsons may have suffered a similar fate as Mahomes – and his loss would be far more damaging in the context of this season given the Packers have had the look of a team that could win the Super Bowl.

7. The Pack were up 23-21 at the end of the third quarter when Parsons went down in Denver. Not only did they eventually succumb 34-26, but the loss dropped them from second place overall in the conference (and first in the NFC North) to seventh, though 1½ games up on the still-dangerous Detroit Lions.

8. The length of the Washington Commanders’ losing streak entering Sunday … before they snapped it by beating the New York Giants 29-21.

8a. The length of the Giants’ losing streak after losing to the Commanders on Sunday.

9. Yay, NFC East … which will almost certainly have its first repeat division winner since 2004 after the Philadelphia Eagles pillaged the Las Vegas Raiders 31-0. Yet even the reigning champs currently seem like the least-bad team of the largely uninspiring quartet.

10. Speaking of concerning injuries, the Rams have their own relative level of concern despite locking up a playoff berth. But WR Davante Adams’ hamstring injury could be a huge setback – especially with LA set to play at Seattle on Thursday night.

11. Currently even with an 11-3 record, though the Rams beat the Seahawks in Week 11, Thursday night’s winner will not only move to the top of the NFC West but also takes possession of the conference’s No. 1 seed. Seattle certainly appears to be the healthier team, if a slightly more erratic one than LA.

12. Commanders LB Von Miller’s place on the NFL’s all-time sack list – the stat became official in 1982 – after he reached 136½ on Sunday. Miller moved a half-sack ahead of Hall of Famer Jared Allen.

13. What a day for Jacksonville Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence, who threw a career-high five TD passes in the AFC South leaders’ 48-20 rout of the New York Jets. Lawrence also rushed for 51 yards and another score. It’s almost like this guy should have been a No. 1 overall draft pick. Wait.

14. If the season ended today – it doesn’t – the New York Giants would own the No. 1 pick of the 2026 draft.

15. But it sure looks like the Raiders, who fell from the No. 1 spot to No. 2 this weekend, might have to make the G-Men an offer. Las Vegas gained all of 75 yards – total – at Philadelphia en route to its seventh consecutive loss.

16. Here’s a wild stat regarding Patriots rookie RB TreVeyon Henderson: Sunday, he joined Chris Johnson as the only players to have multiple games in the same season with multiple rushing TDs of at least 50 yards in those contests.

17. The longtime jersey number of Indianapolis Colts QB Philip Rivers – with the permission of predecessor Daniel Jones and the league – which he wore Sunday at Seattle.

18. The number of seasons Rivers has now played in the league, by virtue of being on the Colts’ active roster – to say nothing of playing an entire game at Lumen Field. And Rivers, 44, provided a valiant effort while passing for 120 yards and a TD in an 18-16 loss to mighty Seattle with just a few days of prep and five years of rust and extra weight … even if all this hullabaloo will keep him out of the Hall of Fame now until at least 2031.

19. But while Indy maybe got a shot of adrenaline and hope that this season can be salvaged, the reality is that the Colts (8-6) continued to spiral after their 7-1 start and are starting to cement themselves into eighth place in the AFC – not where any team wants to be, particularly one that’s reaching for the brass ring.

20. Tennessee Titans QB Cam Ward has thrown multiple TD passes in successive weeks after he hadn’t done it all season prior to December. Didn’t help his team avoid a 37-24 loss to the San Francisco 49ers … but progress!

21½. The number of sacks Cleveland Browns DE Myles Garrett now has, extending what was already his career high after he registered 1½ Sunday at Chicago.

22½. Garrett needs just one more QB takedown to tie the single-season record shared by T.J. Watt and Hall of Famer Michael Strahan.  

23. The jersey number of Rams RB Kyren Williams (88 total yards, 2 TDs), who had a much bigger day than Lions counterpart Jahmyr Gibbs – a big key to LA’s victory. Gibbs had 58 yards and didn’t manage to score as Detroit continued to lose touch with the NFC playoff field.

24. However Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown had himself a day (13 catches, 164 yards, 2 TDs), the USC product shining near his old haunting grounds even if it wasn’t enough to produce a victory.

25. But it did produce a spot for ARSB in the record books, the Detroit star becoming the first player ever to record at least 90 receptions in each of his first five NFL seasons.

26. The jersey number of Houston Texans RB Jawhar Jordan, a second-year player who made his regular-season debut Sunday – after being promoted from the practice squad 24 hours earlier – and rushed for 101 yards on 15 carries.

27. Guess who will be the No. 1 pick on your fantasy waiver wire this week?

28. More importantly, if Jordan can actually be a factor in a Houston offense that got a three-TD passing day from QB C.J. Stroud in Sunday’s 40-20 defeat of the Arizona Cardinals, this team could legitimately be the AFC’s best by the team the playoffs start.

29. The Texans (9-5) remain on track to become the fifth team since 1990 to qualify for postseason despite an 0-3 start.

30. It’s been a tough year for the Cards, but it will wind up a significant one for TE Trey McBride, who had 12 catches for 134 yards and two TDs in defeat Sunday. The receptions and TDs matched McBride’s personal bests in an NFL game, while the yardage total beat his previous career high by 1 yard.

31. McBride now has a league-best 105 receptions and became the first tight end in league history to hit the century mark in successive years. McBride and Travis Kelce are the only tight ends with multiple 100-catch seasons in the NFL, Kelce managing it three times. With 12 catches over the final three games, McBride will break Zach Ertz’s single-season record for tight end catches.

32. And with his 16th consecutive game with at least five receptions, McBride set a new positional record after being tied on that front with Kelce.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Los Angeles Dodgers continue their quest to three-peat as World Series champions.

Closing pitcher Edwin Diaz was the latest addition to the team for the upcoming season, signing a three-year, $69 million deal as a free agent.

Here are the latest rumors involving the Los Angeles Dodgers this week.

Will Tyler Glasnow be traded by Dodgers?

Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow spoke on SiriusXM radio about the rumor of him potentially being traded away from Los Angeles.

‘I’d seen some rumors that I would get traded, so I didn’t know what to believe,’ Glasnow said. ‘I talked to (Dodgers’ president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman) and the front office and they were like, ‘No, you’re not going anywhere.’ So they told me I’m not going to get traded and I trust them.”

Glasnow finished his second season with the Dodgers. He had a 3.19 ERA and a 4-3 record in 18 starts this past season. The veteran pitcher had 106 strikeouts in 90.1 innings, allowing 56 hits, 32 earned runs, 10 home runs and 43 walks.

Dodgers interested in Tarik Skubal?

The Dodgers have been linked to Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal this past week.

 Skubal is one of the better pitchers in the league and could become a free agent after the 2026 season.

The winter meetings concluded on Wednesday and Skubal wasn’t moved.

While a trade is still possible, USA TODAY Sports’ MLB reporter Bob Nightengale predicts that the pitcher will stay in Detroit for the time being, with teams wanting to hold on to their respective assets and see what becomes of Skubal during free agency, where he is projected to receive at least $400 million.

Are the Dodgers done spending?

Nightengale doesn’t think the addition of Diaz will be the last for the Dodgers’ roster this offseason.

According to Nightengale, the Dodgers could still explore their options to find the best fit in the outfield, especially if Los Angeles were to trade Teoscar Hernandez.

Among the potential candidates that could be considered is Kyle Tucker.

The rightfielder spent the first seven seasons of his major-league career with the Houston Astros, but spent the 2025 season with the Chicago Cubs.

At the plate, Tucker had 133 hits for 73 RBI, 91 runs and 22 home runs.

Tucker will turn 29 in January and is interested in a long-term contract with his next team. If the Dodgers want to be in play for Tucker, they will have to be willing to offer more than a short-term deal.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NBA Cup has helped solidify the balance of power atop the NBA.

And no team made a bigger leap — and a more forceful announcement — than the San Antonio Spurs, who toppled the defending-champion Oklahoma City Thunder, even though Victor Wembanyama was on a strict minutes limit.

The Thunder still sit atop these rankings and are still on pace for a historic season, but San Antonio showed that, when fully healthy, it can compete with the NBA’s best.

In the East, the New York Knicks showed they’re still a few steps ahead of the Magic, though the team they defeated in the first round of the playoffs last season — the Detroit Pistons — is still lurking.

Here are USA TODAY Sports’ NBA power rankings after Week 7 of the 2025-26 regular season:

USA TODAY Sports NBA power rankings

Note: Records and stats through Dec.14. Parentheses show movement from last week’s rankings

NBA Week 8 power rankings: Top 5

1. Oklahoma City Thunder, 24-2 (—)

2. Detroit Pistons, 20-5 (+1)

3. San Antonio Spurs, 18-7 (+6)

4. Denver Nuggets, 18-6 (-2)

5. New York Knicks, 18-7 (+1)

With Victor Wembanyama back, and the team fully healthy, the Spurs announced themselves as legitimate contenders in the West with their NBA Cup Semifinal victory over the Thunder. The Pistons continue to shine on defense, ranking third in the league in rating (111.1). And the Knicks have won nine of their last 10, behind Jalen Brunson’s 34.5 points per game over their last four and OG Anunoby’s defense since he returned from a hamstring injury four games ago.

NBA Week 8 power rankings: Nos. 6-10

6. Houston Rockets, 16-6 (-1)

7. Los Angeles Lakers, 17-7 (-3)

8. Minnesota Timberwolves, 17-9 (—)

9. Boston Celtics, 15-10 (-2)

10. Orlando Magic, 15-11 (+2)

The Rockets are the only team to have played just 22 games, with each other squad having at least 24, but Houston is second in net rating (10.3) and first in rebounds per game (48.9). Anthony Edwards (foot soreness) has missed two consecutive games for the Timberwolves, who won both in his absence. And the Magic are making things work, even with more injury issues this season to Paolo Banchero (who has returned from a left groin strain) and Franz Wagner (high-ankle sprain).

NBA Week 8 power rankings: Nos. 11-15

11. Phoenix Suns, 14-12 (—)

12. Toronto Raptors, 15-11 (-2)

13. Miami Heat, 14-11 (—)

14. Atlanta Hawks, 15-12 (—)

15. Philadelphia 76ers, 15-11 (+2)

The Raptors and Heat have each lost four consecutive games and both teams appear to have a similar issue: after starting the season hot, opposing defenses seem to have figured out Toronto’s guard play with RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley missing time and zone and full-court pressure slowing down Miami’s pace. The Hawks, meanwhile, have gotten massive performances from Jalen Johnson and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, but Kristaps Porziņģis will be out at least a pair of weeks with a lingering illness that dates back to last season.

NBA Week 8 power rankings: Nos. 16-20

16. Cleveland Cavaliers, 15-12 (-1)

17. Golden State Warriors, 13-14 (-1)

18. Memphis Grizzlies, 11-14 (—)

19. Dallas Mavericks, 10-16 (—)

20. Chicago Bulls, 10-15 (+3)

This is how bad things are in Cleveland: After the Cavaliers lost at home Sunday, Dec. 14 to the Hornets, Donovan Mitchell admitted postgame, ‘I’d boo us, too.’ The Warriors got Stephen Curry back, but have lost both games since he has returned from a quad contusion. And No. 1 overall rookie Cooper Flagg is starting to play with far more confidence.

NBA Week 8 power rankings: Nos. 21-25

21. Milwaukee Bucks, 11-16 (-1)

22. Portland Trail Blazers, 10-16 (-1)

23. Charlotte Hornets, 8-18 (+1)

24. Utah Jazz, 9-15 (-2)

25. Brooklyn Nets, 7-18 (+2)

The Giannis Antetokounmpo rumors in Milwaukee are heating up and — even though he’s out with a calf strain — a 45-point loss Sunday against the Nets won’t help. The Hornets’ improved shooting pays dividends, as their win Sunday against the Cavaliers showed, just not with enough frequency. And the Jazz have a bright spot with Keyonte George, but the Ainge family needs to figure out the long-term direction of the roster.

NBA Week 8 power rankings: Nos. 26-30

26. Indiana Pacers, 6-20 (—)

27. Los Angeles Clippers, 6-19 (+1)

28. Sacramento Kings, 6-20 (-3)

29. New Orleans Pelicans, 5-22 (+1)

30. Washington Wizards, 4-20 (-1)

Indiana now owns the least efficient offense, which ranks dead last in rating, generating just 108.2 points per 100 possessions. The Clippers have lost three consecutive and a remarkable 17 of their last 20. And the Wizards, as they have most of the season, own the NBA’s worst net rating (13.8).

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The Minnesota Wild shook up the Central Division and Western Conference race by making a blockbuster trade for defenseman Quinn Hughes.

The Wild pulled the trigger on the deal on Dec. 12, sending Marco Rossi, Zeev Buium, Liam Ohgren and a first-round pick to the Vancouver Canucks. Hughes, a former Norris Trophy winner who already has been named to the U.S. Olympic team, will join Team USA general manager Bill Guerin in Minnesota.

‘When a player of Quinn’s caliber becomes available and you have an opportunity to get him, there’s a cost to it,’ Guerin told reporters. ‘We were willing to do what it takes.’

Hughes’ arrival gives the Wild a high-scoring defenseman in a division that includes Colorado’s Cale Makar, Dallas’ Miro Heiskanen and Winnipeg’s Josh Morrissey. Hughes scored a goal on Sunday, Dec. 14, in his Wild debut as Minnesota extended its winning streak to four games.

Here are USA TODAY’s latest NHL power rankings (statistics are through Dec. 14; figures in parentheses indicate change from two weeks ago):

NHL power rankings

1. Colorado Avalanche (0)

With 26 goals and 55 points in 32 games, Hart Trophy favorite Nathan MacKinnon is on pace to match his career best of 140 points while topping 60 goals for the first time. He was voted MVP during his 140-point season in 2023-24.

2. Dallas Stars (0)

The Stars have been outscored 9-2 in back-to-back losses since the end of their 11-game point streak.

3. Carolina Hurricanes (+2)

The Hurricanes are going with three goaltenders after the return of injured Pyotr Kochetkov. Frederik Andersen has been the odd man out, not starting since Dec. 4. Brandon Bussi (11-1) has had four of the recent starts.

4. Minnesota Wild (0)

Quinn Hughes said he appreciated all that the Wild gave up to get him. ‘Some teams, they’re in until they hear what they have to give up, but Billy (Guerin) was just full in. I think that was his first offer, so obviously I want to do what I can here and prove him right.’

5. Vegas Golden Knights (+8)

Jack Eichel, who started strong this season before fading a little, is heating up again with nine points during a five-game point streak.

6. New York Islanders (+9)

The Islanders have beaten the Lightning three times during a 6-1 stretch, plus the No. 1 overall Avalanche and the Pacific Division-leading Golden Knights.

7. Washington Capitals (0)

The Capitals lead the NHL with 24 goals scored by defensemen. Jakob Chychrun has a league-best 12 goals.

8. Anaheim Ducks (+2)

Forward Beckett Sennecke, who had a priceless expression after the Ducks went off the boards and took him No. 3 overall in 2024, is the leading rookie scorer with 26 points in 32 games.

9. Tampa Bay Lightning (-6)

Captain Victor Hedman will have elbow surgery, NHL.com reported, but the Swedish defenseman is expected back before the Olympics. This is the second injury this season for Hedman, who has been limited to 18 games.

10. Philadelphia Flyers (-2)

The Flyers have lost three in a row for the first time this season. But they picked up three points with the losses occurring in overtime or a shootout.

11. Pittsburgh Penguins (-2)

Goalie Stuart Skinner hasn’t suited up yet for the Penguins since he arrived in the Dec. 12 Tristan Jarry trade. With Pittsburgh blowing third-period leads in back-to-back games, it could happen soon. His next chance is Tuesday, Dec. 16, against the Oilers, his former team.

12. Los Angeles Kings (-1)

The Kings have gone to overtime in six of their last 11 games, picking up one win. That came in overtime. They’ve also lost three times in overtime and twice in a shootout.

13. Montreal Canadiens (+5)

Goalie call-up Jacob Fowler had a 36-save victory against the Penguins in his NHL debut. He and the team blew a 3-0 lead in a 5-4 overtime loss to the Rangers in his second game. Fowler didn’t dress on Dec. 14 when the Canadiens beat the Oilers.

14. Detroit Red Wings (+11)

Patrick Kane is coming up on two milestones. He has 498 goals and can become the second player born in the United States to reach 500. He’s also eight points from tying Mike Modano as the top-scoring U.S.-born NHL player.

15. Boston Bruins (-3)

Defenseman Charlie McAvoy picked up an assist in his return from a broken jaw. He also lost teeth when hit in the face by a slap shot.

16. New Jersey Devils (-10)

The Devils, still missing Jack Hughes (finger surgery), announced that Timo Meier is taking personal leave to attend to a family matter. The Devils have gone 6-10 without Hughes.

17. Florida Panthers (+4)

Carter Verhaeghe totaled five goals in his first four games after he became a father in early December.

18. Edmonton Oilers (+5)

The Oilers moved on from Skinner, who was hot and cold in leading Edmonton to back-to-back appearances in the Stanley Cup Final. Jarry won his Oilers debut after the Skinner trade, making 25 saves in a 6-3 victory against the Maple Leafs.

19. New York Rangers (+3)

The Rangers rallied from a 3-0 deficit to pick up their third home win of the season (they’re 12-5-1 on the road). J.T. Miller, who’s considered on the bubble for the U.S. Olympic team, scored the tying and overtime goal against the Canadiens.

20. Toronto Maple Leafs (+7)

Auston Matthews has only four multi-point games this season and one since he returned from a lower-body injury.

21. Ottawa Senators (-7)

Captain Brady Tkachuk has one goal in eight games since returning from thumb surgery after Thanksgiving. He also has six assists in that stretch.

22. San Jose Sharks (+4)

The Sharks overcame a 5-1 deficit in the third period on Dec. 13 to defeat the Penguins 6-5 in overtime. It was the sixth time San Jose has scored six goals this season.

23. Utah Mammoth (+1)

Logan Cooley, the team’s leading goal scorer, will miss eight weeks with a lower-body injury. He was initially hurt when a knee-on-knee hit knocked him out of a game. Three games later, he hurt his leg while crashing into the net.

24. Chicago Blackhawks (-8)

Star Connor Bedard sat out a Dec. 13 game after being injured on the final play of his previous game. The Blackhawks hope to have an update on his status on Dec. 15.

25. Winnipeg Jets (-6)

No. 1 goalie Connor Hellebuyck returned on Dec. 13 ahead of schedule after knee surgery. The reigning Hart/Vezina Trophy winner stopped 24 of 25 shots for a victory. The team had gone 2-8-1 in Hellebuyck’s absence.

26. Columbus Blue Jackets (-6)

Captain Boone Jenner had a goal and an assist in his return from missing a month with an injury.

27. Buffalo Sabres (+1)

28. Seattle Kraken (-11)

The Kraken’s penalty kill is last in the league at 67.5%. The worst in NHL history for a full season is 68.2% by the 1979-80 Kings.

29. St. Louis Blues (0)

Goalie Jordan Binnington continues to struggle, getting pulled in two of his last four starts. He ranks second to last in the league in Moneypuck’s goals saved above expected.

30. Calgary Flames (+1)

The Flames remain the NHL’s lowest-scoring team at 2.48 goals per game but they have scored three or more goals in seven of their last 12 games.

31. Nashville Predators (+1)

Steven Stamkos has taken off with eight goals in his last nine games, including a four-goal game on Dec. 11.

32. Vancouver Canucks (-2)

The Hughes trade gives the Vancouver a promising young defenseman in Buium and a young center in Rossi. Buium had a goal and an assist in his Vancouver debut. Rossi, activated from the injured list, and Ohgren had no points in the win against the Devils.

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  • The Kansas City Chiefs were eliminated from playoff contention after a 16-13 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.
  • Quarterback Patrick Mahomes suffered a torn ACL in the final moments of the game.
  • The loss ends the Chiefs’ streak of seven consecutive AFC Championship Game appearances.
  • This season marks the first time the Chiefs have missed the playoffs since Mahomes became the starting quarterback.

So, this is how it ends.

Patrick Mahomes was knocked out of the loss that eliminated the Kansas City Chiefs in the waning moments of the game with a wicked left knee injury.

There was no cape for Superman to put on to save the Chiefs Kingdom this time.

Rats. Oh, you know he tried.

But the knee buckled and bent awkwardly. He lay on the turf in apparent anguish as the medical team administered treatment. Teammates went down to one knee. It was a somber scene at Arrowhead Stadium. Mahomes, who has demonstrated repeatedly that he is as great as it gets, is human after all. The Chiefs needed him to spark a last-minute rally for a game-tying field goal or even a winning touchdown, but there was nothing left.

Oh, you know he was game.

Mahomes scored the only Chiefs touchdown during the 16-13 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers, and for much of the game was his team’s leading rusher. This was part of the problem. Too often, they’ve relied on him to do too much. He won’t win the NFL’s MVP award this season, but he deserves it nonetheless, because without him – and with all due respect to the oft-proficient, Steve Spagnuolo-coordinated defense that allowed just 16 points on Sunday – his team was toast.

He provided heart, soul, energy, hope and logic that with the Chiefs’ season on the line – and the remarkable streak of seven consecutive trips to the AFC championship game in the mix – there was still a chance to make a miracle run.

Until there wasn’t.

Minutes after the game, the ominous tone from Chiefs coach Andy Reid strongly hinted that the star quarterback was done for the year.

“It doesn’t look good,” Reid said during his postgame news conference.

The Chiefs followed on Sunday night with official confirmation that Mahomes suffered a torn ACL. A statement from the team added, “Patrick and the club are exploring surgical options.”    

No Mahomes, no chance on Sunday. Now, what’s next?

First things first: Hail to the Chiefs. This is the first time that Kansas City (6-8) won’t be in AFC playoffs since Mahomes became the starter, and it’s the first time the Chiefs have lost at least eight games in a season since 2012, when they were 2-14 in the season before Andy Reid became coach.

With Mahomes, the Chiefs won three Super Bowls and played in two others. In a parity-laden league leveled out by a salary cap, the Chiefs managed to keep winning, keep competing for crowns, to establish their own dynasty in the aftermath of the New England Patriots run powered by Tom Brady and Bill Belichick.

Now this.

Mahomes gamely limped off the field and to the bench under his own power after suffering his injury. And intentional or not, it was some kind of statement about the determination and pride that any of us who have watched him over the years realize runs so deep through his blood.

Minutes later, though, CBS’ cameras captured his journey to the locker room. Mahomes couldn’t get there on his own. He was helped up the tunnel with medical staffers holding him up on both sides like human crutches.

Sadly, this moment symbolized how this chapter – if not era – ends for the proud franchise that is now so battered.

Sure, Mahomes is the face of the Chiefs. But that was a dose of unintended insult added to injury. The Chiefs didn’t just lose. They lost their main man in the process.

With Mahomes knocked out of the contest, the Chiefs turned to Gardner Minshew, the backup quarterback without so much as a cape.

Minshew came in and promptly moved the chains with a short completion to Travis Kelce. Good idea. Good execution. Then the Chiefs were flagged for delay of game, with the poor execution of just getting the snap off reflected by the lack of urgency that you’d never see from Mahomes in this situation.

The next play, Minshew threw a lazy pass toward Kelce into double – or was it, triple? – coverage that was intercepted by Derwin James.

In other words, no Mahomes, no chance.

A weird January is coming in 2026. The last time the Chiefs weren’t in the AFC Championship Game? Try 2017. Way back on pre-pandemic Earth.

Maybe it is indeed the end of an era for the Chiefs, whose streak of nine consecutive AFC West titles was snapped. It’s certainly more than a mere speed bump.

Suddenly, this season, a team that knew how to win in crunch time – the Chiefs were 12-0 in one-score games last season and set an NFL record by winning 17 consecutive one-score games – couldn’t win the close ones.

On Sunday, the Chiefs fell to 1-7 this season in one-score games.

What next? There are glaring gaps with the running game and the pass rush, and who knows how much longer Kelce will play after mulling retirement last offseason. Yet with Mahomes being Mahomes – and it is apparent that rehab will dominate his offseason – they can still build around the quintessential centerpiece.

Yet nothing is automatic. As spectacular as Mahomes has been over the years, it was never automatic that he’d lead another Super Bowl run, even though it might have seemed that way. That was always packing a superhero cape. Now it’s not automatic that the Chiefs will quickly bounce back as a contender.

For a change, the Chiefs will have a long offseason to deal with their issues.

Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on  X: @JarrettBell

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Every week for the duration of the 2025 regular season, USA TODAY Sports will provide timely updates to the NFL’s ever-evolving playoff picture − typically starting Sunday afternoon and then moving forward for the remainder of the week (through Monday’s and Thursday’s games or Saturday’s, if applicable. And, when the holidays roll around, we’ll be watching then, too).

What just happened? What does it mean? What are the pertinent factors (and, perhaps, tiebreakers) prominently in play as each conference’s seven-team bracket begins to crystallize? All will be explained and analyzed up to the point when the postseason field is finalized on Sunday, Jan. 4.

Here’s where things stand with Week 15 nearly complete:

NFC playoff picture

x − 1. Los Angeles Rams (11-3), NFC West leaders: They became the first team to clinch a playoff spot, barely evading the Lions on Sunday. LA has the inside track for home-field advantage and a first-round bye, largely because the Rams’ Week 11 defeat of Seattle currently remains pivotal. But the rematch comes Thursday night. Remaining schedule: at Seahawks, at Falcons, vs. Cardinals

2. Chicago Bears (10-4), NFC North leaders: How tightly packed is the NFC? One narrow Week 14 loss dropped the Bears from first place in the conference to seventh. Sunday’s win, in conjunction with Green Bay’s loss, put Da Bears back up to second overall. Remaining schedule: vs. Packers, at 49ers, vs. Lions

3. Philadelphia Eagles (9-5), NFC East leaders: Get-right win vs. Raiders gives them some needed breathing room. Win Saturday at Washington, and the division title remains in Philly another year. Remaining schedule: at Commanders, at Bills, vs. Commanders

4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (7-7), NFC South leaders: Hopefully coach Todd Bowles’ charges care (expletive) enough this week. A fifth loss in their past six games dropped them to .500 on Thursday night, but Carolina’s loss Sunday put the Bucs back in first place. The Bucs’ one-game advantage in the common-games tiebreaker is currently the difference with the Panthers. Beat Carolina twice, and the Bucs will still win the NFC South. Remaining schedule: at Panthers, at Dolphins, vs. Panthers

5. Seattle Seahawks (11-3), wild card No. 1: They barely escaped Colts QB Philip Rivers’ return to the NFL after five years but notched a two-point win. All three of the ‘Hawks’ losses are against NFC opponents, including two in the division − defeats that don’t serve them well in tiebreaker scenarios. But splitting their season series with the Rams on Thursday would actually vault Seattle to top of NFC heap. Remaining schedule: vs. Rams, at Panthers, at 49ers

6. San Francisco 49ers (10-4), wild card No. 2: They’re just behind the Rams and Seahawks for the NFC West lead, yet only a half-game out of the seventh seed. Remaining schedule: at Colts, vs. Bears, vs. Seahawks

7. Green Bay Packers (9-4-1), wild card No. 3: DE Micah Parsons got hurt Sunday, and so did the Pack’s positioning − down from the No. 2 seed to seventh due to their loss at Denver. Remaining schedule: at Bears, vs. Ravens, at Vikings

8. Detroit Lions (8-6), in the hunt: Tough loss to the Rams drops them 1½ games behind the projected playoff field. Yet Detroit remains within striking range of a wild-card berth and maybe the NFC North crown. Remaining schedule: vs. Steelers, at Vikings, at Bears

9. Carolina Panthers (7-7), in the hunt: Had they beaten the Saints on Sunday, they simply would have needed one win over Tampa Bay to win the NFC South. But the Panthers came up light in New Orleans. Carolina and the Buccaneers will decide this on the field with two meetings between Weeks 16 and 18. Remaining schedule: vs. Buccaneers, vs. Seahawks, at Buccaneers

10. Dallas Cowboys (6-7-1), in the hunt: Sunday night’s crushing loss to the Vikings all but eliminated them − Dallas needing to win all its games and hoping the Eagles lose all theirs if ‘America’s Team’ is to win NFC East. Remaining schedule: vs. Chargers, at Commanders, at Giants

AFC playoff picture

x − 1. Denver Broncos (12-2), AFC West leaders: Quite a Sunday, the first team in the league to 12 wins and first AFC squad to clinch a playoff berth. New England’s loss also boosts the Broncos’ odds of winding up with the No. 1 seed. Remaining schedule: vs. Jaguars, at Chiefs, vs. Chargers

2. New England Patriots (11-3), AFC East leaders: Their 10-game heater snapped, they failed to clinch the division Sunday and lost valuable ground in their bid for the No.1 seed. But the Pats are still in driver’s seat to win AFC East. Remaining schedule: at Ravens, at Jets, vs. Dolphins

3. Jacksonville Jaguars (10-4), AFC South leaders: Win keeps them ahead of surging Houston. Remaining schedule: at Broncos, vs. Colts, at Titans

4. Pittsburgh Steelers (7-6), AFC North leaders: They jumped up five spots, from out of the field back into the division lead by winning at Baltimore in Week 14. Sweep the Ravens and notch one other win, and Pittsburgh secures the division. Remaining schedule: vs. Dolphins, at Lions, at Browns, vs. Ravens

5. Los Angeles Chargers (10-4), wild card No. 1: They completed a season sweep of the Chiefs on Sunday, officially eliminating the three-time-defending AFC champions from playoff consideration. The Bolts have now won six of seven. A one-win advantage in AFC games (8-2) keeps them ahead of Buffalo. Remaining schedule: at Chiefs, at Cowboys, vs. Texans, at Broncos

6. Buffalo Bills (10-4), wild card No. 1: Still alive to win their sixth straight AFC East crown following Sunday’s win at Foxborough. Remaining schedule: at Browns, vs. Eagles, vs. Jets

7. Houston Texans (9-5), wild card No. 3: They’ve won seven of eight, including six in a row. Remaining schedule: vs. Raiders, at Chargers, vs. Colts

8. Indianapolis Colts (8-6), in the hunt: Now in the hands of 44-year-old Rivers, they face a steep climb back to relevance − their 7-1 start already starting to seem like ancient history. Rivers gave a valiant effort Sunday in his first NFL action in nearly five years but came up just short. And the Colts’ schedule doesn’t let up the rest of the way. Remaining schedule: vs. 49ers, vs. Jaguars, at Texans

9. Baltimore Ravens (7-7), in the hunt: Sunday’s shutout at Cincinnati could be key in race for AFC North. Remaining schedule: vs. Patriots, at Packers, at Steelers

10. Miami Dolphins (6-7), in the hunt: They probably need to win the remainder of their games to even have a shot at postseason qualification. Remaining schedule: at Steelers, vs. Bengals, vs. Buccaneers, at Patriots

NFL playoff-clinching scenarios for Week 16 (incomplete)

New England clinches playoff berth with:

▶ Win

Philadelphia clinches NFC East title with:

  1. Win or
  2. Dallas loss

NFL teams eliminated from playoff contention in 2025

x – clinched playoff berth

y – clinched division

z – clinched home-field advantage, first-round bye

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Green Bay Packers defensive end Micah Parsons appeared to suffer a serious knee injury Sunday afternoon during his team’s game against the Broncos in Denver.

Shortly before the third quarter expired, with the Pack leading 23-21, Parsons was in pursuit of Broncos quarterback Bo Nix on a pass play. But as he changed direction to give further chase, Parsons’ left knee appeared to buckle before he collapsed to the ground and grabbed at the joint.

Parsons was able to leave the field under his own power but immediately headed into the locker room. He did not return to the game.

“It doesn’t look good, I’ll leave it at that,’ Green Bay coach Matt LaFleur said afterward as speculation about a torn ACL grew.

A four-time Pro Bowler acquired from the Dallas Cowboys rights before the season − for two first-round draft picks and defensive lineman Kenny Clark − Parsons has lived up to his billing with 12½ sacks so far in 2025 for the Packers.

But Green Bay succumbed to the Broncos following Parsons’ unfortunate exit and fell into the NFC’s seventh projected playoff spot.

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